Being a center of the arts, the center had tons of Japanese performances and art displays for two weeks . . . and since
the event is Japanese related, they also had robotics demonstrations events called
Robotopia Rising!
This is what I'll report on . . .

RobotsKokoro's Actroid DER2 greeted visitors throughout the festival, talking to them and even answering their questions.
It used Advanced Media, Inc.'s voice recognition "AmiVoice" support, and a hidden room behind it filled with pneumatics, to create
the human-like appearance and the range of gestures/facial expressions.

Toyota Partner Robot was developed with artificial lips that move with the same finesse as human ones, enabling it to play the trumpet.

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd's Wakamaru can converse with people via voice and facial recognition with a vocabulary of up to 10,000 Japanese words.
Unfortunately it wasn't so interesting beyond getting children to exercise for 5 seconds . . .

And of course, no robot demo would be complete without Asimo rebelling against orders from humans . . . Ok actually Asimo just stopped working.
The poor lady kept saying whatever came to mind for like 5 minutes straight until she finally gave up and they called off the show . . .

i-SOBOT, the 'world's smallest biped', was there . . .

Aibo was there too . . . but I'm too lazy to post his video . . .

PeopleI got an opportunity to personally meet Tomotaka Takahashi, the creator of several
famous biped robots, while he was in DC.
Takahashi also gave a talk about his FT, MANOI, Chroino, VisiON,
and Tachikoma projects.
This video is a demo he gave.

I also got an opportunity to meet Timothy Hornyak, author of Loving the Machine.
This is a video of him showing his MANOI robot (bought from Takahashi?) for me:

Lectures
The lecture series featured world famous robot creators, each of which gave a talk about their work.
Unfortunately I was not allowed to film any of it, so I just have a few pics . . .

ROBO-Garage founder Tomotaka Takahashi talked about his various homemade robots. Yeap, apparently
he doesn't have access to CNC machines and injection molders like I do, yet still makes impressive bots!
As for the nice plastic plating on his bots - homemade vacuum forming.
He put a lot of effort in measuring how level the table was before the demonstration, so I'm assuming he doesn't
have sensors in his bots yet . . .

Dr. Takanori Shibata, the creator of Paro, talked about the value of robotic therapy.
He demonstrates the purring stuffed seal as the solution for all
the old and crazy people in the world =P

Just in case you haven't seen his seal before . . . This robot is so cute you almost wouldn't stop
it from taking over the world . . .

Dr. Hiroshi Ishiguro, a leading researcher in androids with an expertise for making them move
and interact, spoke about the future role of androids in society. I first ran into him in the elevator,
before I even knew he was going to be at the event, leaving me a bit surprised.
After a bit of awkwardness, I finally got the guts
to ask the dumb question "Are you the guy that looks like his robot?" . . . I'm such a dork . . .

All of the lectures were guided by Mr. Hornyak, who himself gave a lecture on how manga and anime
strongly influences the robots built in Japan today. There was quite a lot of manga free to read
at the event, some of it you may recognize . . .

This is him and Ishiguro during the question/answer
session. I was surprised there were several good questions asked by the audience . . .